IIW-2363 Simulation of NDT

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE USE ANDVALIDATION OF NON-DESTRUCTIVE TESTING SIMULATION

2. Considerations and recommandations on the use of NDT simulation

2. CONSIDERATIONSAND

RECOMMENDATIONS ONTHE USE OF NDT SIMULATION

2.1 Scope and definitions

NDT simulation is used nowadays in a wide range of different applications:

Performance demonstration of existing method Reliability assessment of method through Probability of Detection (POD) studies Study of the inspectability of components through“virtual” testing Help in analysis, better understanding of underlying phenomena, data inversion ...

In general, the application of simulation is aimed at technically justifying the use of one technique, one probe, one data processing algorithm, etc… in relation to the final objective being pursued by the practitioner. In such cases the information provided by simulation is included as an element of the technical justification. By simulation we mean the use of a software program providing quantitative predictions on some aspect of the inspection process. The software results from the implementation of a numerical algorithm solving a mathematical formulation of the physical phenomena involved in the simulation. We will call “model” the mathematical formulation plus the numerical algorithm. 2.2 Typical ways of using simulation as element of technical justification In general, NDT techniques consist of measuring the response of the interrogated component or part to an excitation. The excitation is a transmission of energy which interacts with the component and induces the response. One common use of simulation consists of computing the response of the inspected component (echoes for ultrason- ics, variation of impedance for eddy current, etc) after having postulated the presence of one or several flaws whose characteristics are inputs to the simulation. Predict the signal amplitudes from postulated defects relative to the response of a calibration defect (side drilled hole, flat bottomed hole, etc…) Estimate the detection performance of a method as a function of the characteristics of the defect: size and shape, location, material orientation, roughness…For instance simulation can give the minimum detectable size of de- fect above a given threshold. Quantify the influence of various (controlled and uncontrolled) parameters : e.g. the influence of the geometry of the component, the effects of cladding, the effects of metallurgical microstructure, etc. Determine a “worst case” among the possible ranges of variation of a set of identified parameters. Interpolate between cases covered by experimental data Compute POD (probability of detection) curves as a function of the flaw size given a set of varying parameters and their ranges of variation. … The computation of the responses of flaws can be used to:

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International Institute of Welding

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